Four-Spotted Jade Roach (Eustegasta buprestoides) for Sale
SKU: 6991059363

Four-Spotted Jade Roach (Eustegasta buprestoides) for Sale

Sale price$9.00 Regular price$10.00
Save 10%

Shipping Estimate
USA
  • USA
  • CAN

Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 5 - Jul 10

Promo Codes Available:

For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15

Description

Four-Spotted Jade Roach (Eustegasta buprestoides) for SaleThe Four Spotted Jade Roach is one of the more visually striking smaller cockroaches available in the UK hobby a Central African species with a lustrous jade green base colour punctuated by four distinct golden yellow spots arranged symmetrically across the wing covers. The metallic sheen on the exoskeleton catches light at different angles, shifting between emerald and bronze tones, and the symmetrical four spot pattern is genuinely distinctive once

The Four-Spotted Jade Roach is one of the more visually striking smaller cockroaches available in the UK hobby — a Central African species with a lustrous jade-green base colour punctuated by four distinct golden-yellow spots arranged symmetrically across the wing covers. The metallic sheen on the exoskeleton catches light at different angles, shifting between emerald and bronze tones, and the symmetrical four-spot pattern is genuinely distinctive once you know what to look for. Combined with the species's manageable size and steady breeding behaviour, this is a properly approachable display roach for keepers ready to step beyond the most common starter species.

This is part of our wider cockroach collection and pairs well alongside our other small-to-medium display roaches — the iridescent Emerald Cockroach (Pseudoglomeris magnifica), the metallic blue Sapphire Flower Cockroach (Eucorydia yasumatsui), and the larger Giant Flower Cockroach (E. dasytoides). For collectors building a focused jewel-roach collection, E. buprestoides brings something different — the spot pattern rather than the bands or solid metallic surfaces of the Eucorydia and Pseudoglomeris species.

One honest framing point up front. E. buprestoides is broadly easy to keep but has a few specific quirks that matter. Adults can climb and can fly, so escape-proofing is essential — both an airtight lid and a smooth climbing barrier inside the rim are standard. Small brood sizes and slow nymph development mean colony establishment takes time. To set things up properly from the start, browse our accessories collection for the chunky substrate components, supplementary foods, and cover this species depends on.

Quick Care Summary

  • Scientific Name: Eustegasta buprestoides (Walker, 1868)
  • Common Name: Four-Spotted Jade Roach
  • Family: Blaberidae (superfamily Blaberoidea); originally described as Epilampra buprestoides
  • Origin: Central and West Africa — recorded from Cameroon, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea (Bioko Island), and the Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • Adult Size: 20–25 mm typical in hobby stock; some sources record smaller (12–15 mm) which may reflect different captive lines or measurement conventions
  • Lifespan: Adults 3–6 months after maturity; females live noticeably longer than males
  • Difficulty: Easy to medium — straightforward husbandry but slow to establish a productive colony
  • Temperature: 22–28 °C; warmer end (24–28 °C) supports faster development and better breeding
  • Humidity: Moderate — substrate kept humid but not wet
  • Ventilation: Moderate to high — they aren't particularly picky in this regard
  • Climbing: Adults are good climbers — airtight lid plus internal climbing barrier required
  • Flying: Adults can fly — escape-proofing genuinely matters
  • Activity: Primarily nocturnal; will come out during the day in established colonies, particularly when food is offered
  • Appearance: Lustrous jade-green base colour with metallic sheen; four distinct golden-yellow spots arranged symmetrically on the wing covers; iridescent quality under lighting shifts between emerald and bronze tones
  • Sexual dimorphism: Males slightly smaller and more slender than females
  • Reproduction: Ovoviviparous — gives birth to live young; typically around 12 nymphs per brood; gestation 1.5–2 months
  • Nymph development: Approximately 7–8 months from birth to maturity
  • Rarity: Uncommon in the UK hobby; relatively common in international culture

What Makes the Four-Spotted Jade Roach Special

The symmetrical spot pattern is genuinely distinctive. Where most metallic cockroach species rely on solid colour blocks, bands, or wing-edge contrast, E. buprestoides displays four clear yellow-gold spots arranged symmetrically across the wing covers — two on each side. The pattern is consistent enough to give the species its common name and to make individual animals immediately recognisable in a mixed-cockroach collection. Combined with the jade-green metallic base, the result is a properly different aesthetic from the rest of the hobby.

The metallic sheen has depth to it. The exoskeleton isn't just green — it shifts visibly between emerald, jade, and bronze tones depending on the lighting angle. Under direct light the bronze undertones come forward; in softer lighting the jade reads more cleanly. This iridescent quality means the animals look noticeably different in different setups and lighting conditions, which adds to their interest as a display species.

The Central African heritage is unusual in the hobby. Most metallic cockroaches available to UK keepers come from Southeast Asia (the Eucorydia species) or the Caribbean. E. buprestoides brings a different geographic origin — the equatorial forests of Cameroon, Gabon, and the Congo basin — and a different evolutionary background that's reflected in its specific care preferences (humid but well-ventilated substrate, fruit-and-veg-heavy diet rather than leaf-litter staple).

The species has a quiet temperament. Like many display roaches but more so, E. buprestoides is calm, peaceful, and doesn't react aggressively to disturbance. They're not particularly fast runners compared to wild-type cockroaches, and they don't bite or have noticeable defensive behaviours beyond the usual hiding response. For keepers interested in cockroaches as observable animals rather than feeder insects or pest species, this kind of temperament is a real advantage.

The display-roach cluster. Within our cockroach catalogue, E. buprestoides brings spot-pattern aesthetics to a collection that otherwise leans heavily on solid metallic species (Emerald, Sapphire Flower, Giant Flower) or sized-up African species (Simandoa). It's the right addition for keepers wanting visual variety within a focused metallic-roach collection.

About the Name

A brief clarification on the species's nomenclature and history.

  • Eustegasta buprestoides: The current scientific binomial. The species epithet "buprestoides" references buprestid beetles (jewel beetles), which the species superficially resembles in its metallic colouration and spot patterning.
  • Epilampra buprestoides: The original 1868 description by Walker; reclassified to Eustegasta by Princis in 1963.
  • Four-Spotted Jade Roach / Four-Spotted Jade Cockroach: The standard hobby trade names, describing both the spot pattern and the metallic green colouration.
  • Original description: Walker, F. (1868) in Catalogue of the Specimens of Blattariae in the Collection of the British Museum, with the type specimen held at the Natural History Museum, London.
  • Taxonomic placement: Family Blaberidae (the live-bearing cockroaches), within superfamily Blaberoidea.

Setting Up the Enclosure

A 5-litre container suits a starter culture of 10–15 nymphs; a 10–20 litre tank or tub works well for a permanent colony. E. buprestoides adults are competent climbers and capable of short flights, so escape-proofing is genuinely necessary rather than a precaution. The right setup combines two features: an airtight lid (ideally clip-locked or with foam-sealed edges) and a smooth climbing barrier around the inside rim of the enclosure — typically a band of petroleum jelly or a strip of smooth plastic that adults can't grip. Ventilation holes should be covered with fine mesh sized small enough that newly-emerged nymphs (3–4 mm) can't squeeze through.

Moderate to high ventilation is preferred but the species isn't particularly picky in this regard. Cross-ventilation between opposing sides works well. Don't undersize ventilation in pursuit of humidity retention — Blaberidae generally do better with proper airflow than with stagnant humid setups.

Hides are technically unnecessary for this burrowing species, but provide them anyway for display purposes. Cork bark, lotus pods, and decaying hardwood pieces all work well. Browse our accessories range for cork bark, lotus pods and other natural cover options. Adults will climb on above-ground structures and rest on cork bark vertical pieces, even though they spend most of their time burrowing.

Important husbandry note: Skip the standing water dish. Misting and substrate moisture provide all the hydration this species needs, and standing water in the warm humid setup adds drowning risk for nymphs without practical benefit.

Substrate

This is the central setup detail for E. buprestoides. Substrate depth and composition matter genuinely more than for most cockroach species:

  • 5–10 cm depth of chunky, loose substrate — this is critical. Compacted substrate makes burrowing impossible for the small, fragile nymphs and is one of the documented causes of colony collapse in this species.
  • Base of coconut fibre, sphagnum peat, or pesticide-free potting soil — available in our accessories range
  • Mixed with chunkier components: coco coir chunks, mulch, decaying hardwood crumbles, or orchid bark — to maintain loose structure
  • White rotten hardwood incorporated through the substrate — consumed with enthusiasm by this species when offered, more so than leaf litter
  • A small amount of sphagnum moss for moisture retention in one corner
  • Springtails inoculated into the substrate to consume droppings and food waste

Keep the substrate humid but not wet. Soggy conditions encourage fungal issues; properly damp substrate that crumbles in the hand without dripping is the right consistency. If the substrate compacts as it ages, that's a sign to refresh it — compacted substrate is the most likely reason a previously stable colony will start to fail.

Top layer: leaf litter is optional rather than essential. Unlike most isopods and many cockroaches, E. buprestoides doesn't depend on leaf litter for food. White rotten hardwood is consumed with much more enthusiasm.

Humidity and Temperature

Maintain moderate humidity with the substrate kept consistently damp rather than wet. Mist one side of the enclosure twice weekly to create a moisture gradient — animals can choose damper or drier conditions as they prefer. Air humidity in the 60–70% range works well. Good ventilation alongside the moderate humidity is the right combination; high humidity plus stagnant air is the failure mode.

Temperature should be 22–28 °C. The species tolerates a wider temperature range than many tropical cockroaches and can handle brief drops to around 18 °C without serious issue, making them more forgiving of UK room-temperature variation than the strictly warm-loving Cubaris isopods or Pseudoglomeris cockroaches. That said, the warmer end of the range (24–28 °C) is genuinely better for breeding and nymph development — most UK keepers benefit from a low-wattage heat mat on a thermostat to support the warmer end during cooler months. Side-mounted heating creates a thermal gradient and avoids overheating substrate where nymphs spend most of their time.

Diet

E. buprestoides has a more varied and omnivorous diet than typical detritivorous roaches — the species's natural diet leans towards fruits, soft vegetation, and protein-rich items rather than leaf litter and rotting wood alone:

  • Dry dog food or premium cat food — works well as a staple in the wild-type diet. The animals consume it readily and it provides balanced nutrition without spoilage risk.
  • Fresh fruit — apple, banana, mango, melon, pear. Replace within 24–48 hours.
  • Fresh vegetables — carrot, sweet potato, courgette, squash. Replace within 24–48 hours.
  • White rotten hardwood — the species's preferred secondary food, consumed with noticeable enthusiasm
  • Bee pollen and protein supplements — fish flakes, dried mealworms, dried shrimp offered occasionally. Browse the protein options in our accessories collection.
  • Dried mushrooms and lichen — well-received supplementary foods when available
  • Calcium sources — cuttlebone, crushed limestone as background availability. Our calcium options cover the full range.
  • Leaf litter — optional. Eaten in small quantities but not a dietary staple for this species; don't rely on it as the foundation of feeding.

Feed 2–3 times weekly. Position fresh food on dishes or leaves rather than directly on substrate to make removal of uneaten portions easier and reduce mould risk in the humid setup. Established colonies will come out to feed during the day when food is offered, providing more observation opportunities than purely night-active species.

Breeding

E. buprestoides is ovoviviparous — females retain developing young internally and give birth to live nymphs rather than laying egg cases. Gestation runs approximately 1.5–2 months depending on temperature, with brood sizes typically around 12 nymphs at 3–4 mm in length. Newborn nymphs immediately burrow into substrate for safety and feed nocturnally during their first weeks.

For breeding success:

  • Stable temperature in the warmer half of the range (24–28 °C is ideal for active breeding)
  • Loose, chunky substrate at proper depth — this is the most important husbandry detail for nymph survival
  • Consistent moisture without saturation
  • Mixed-age colony — given the 7–8 month nymph-to-adult timeline and the offset male/female lifespans, maintaining nymphs alongside adults supports continuous breeding
  • Springtails inoculated to manage waste and prevent filth buildup
  • Avoidance of substrate compaction — refresh substrate components if it starts feeling dense rather than loose
  • Minimal disturbance of substrate — nymphs are fragile and easily crushed by careless digging
  • Patience — small broods and slow nymph development mean colony expansion is steady rather than rapid

Brood sizes are smaller than many tropical cockroaches, and nymph development is slower than feeder roach species. This combination means colonies are properly slow to start — a successful starter culture might take a year or more before becoming reliably productive. Once established, breeding is fairly stable and consistent rather than spectacular.

Who Should Buy Four-Spotted Jade Roaches?

Ideal for:

  • Display enthusiasts drawn to spotted-pattern aesthetics rather than solid metallic species
  • Keepers building a focused metallic-roach collection alongside the Emerald, Sapphire Flower, and Giant Flower species
  • Intermediate keepers ready for a species with slightly more specific substrate requirements than starter roaches
  • Anyone interested in African invertebrates — Central/West African roach species are relatively uncommon in UK culture
  • Long-term project keepers comfortable with slow colony establishment
  • Bioactive setup enthusiasts — they coexist well with isopods and springtails, occupying slightly drier substrate areas than most isopod species prefer

Not ideal for:

  • Complete beginners — Madagascar Hissers or other hardier roach species are easier starting points
  • Keepers without a properly escape-proof enclosure — climbing and flying ability make a sealed lid plus internal climbing barrier necessary
  • Setups where substrate quality can't be properly maintained — compaction kills colonies
  • Anyone wanting fast colony expansion — the 7–8 month nymph development and ~12 nymph brood size mean colonies grow slowly
  • Keepers wanting a leaf-litter-based diet species — they prefer fruit, veg, and rotting wood over leaf litter

Realistic Expectations

The escape-proofing is genuinely necessary. Some hobby sources describe this species as non-climbing or flightless, but more thorough keeper accounts consistently report that adults are capable climbers and capable of short flights. Treat escape-proofing as a setup requirement rather than an optional precaution: airtight lid, internal climbing barrier (petroleum jelly or smooth plastic strip), and fine mesh on ventilation holes. The animals are small enough that they can squeeze through surprisingly small gaps — ventilation hole diameter no greater than about 2 mm is standard advice.

Substrate matters more than for most species. Compacted substrate is the documented colony-killer for E. buprestoides. Small nymphs need to burrow through loose substrate to survive, and dense or compacted material makes that impossible. Refresh substrate components periodically if you notice it settling into a denser form than when first set up. A loose, chunky mix with good structure is non-negotiable rather than ideal.

Don't overdig the enclosure. Nymphs spend much of their early development burrowed into the substrate, and careless digging during maintenance can crush them. Spot-clean from the surface rather than excavating; substrate refreshes should happen by adding new material on top rather than turning over the existing substrate aggressively.

Colony growth is steady, not explosive. New keepers used to feeder roaches (Dubia, Red Runners, Hissers) can be surprised by how slowly E. buprestoides colonies grow. The combination of small brood sizes and slow nymph development means even successful colonies expand at a manageable pace rather than overwhelming the enclosure. For collectors, this is a feature; for anyone wanting feeders, it's a sign this is the wrong species.

The four spots vary slightly between individuals. The pattern is consistent enough to be diagnostic for the species, but individual variation in spot size, intensity, and exact position is normal. Don't expect every animal to look identical — the slight variation adds to the visual interest of an established colony.

They're not feeder insects. Despite being a relatively small roach, the slow breeding rate, long nymph development, and display value make E. buprestoides entirely unsuitable for use as feeder insects. This is a display species in the same category as the other metallic roaches in our catalogue.

Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
  1. Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
  • Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy
SKU: 6991059363

Discover Niche Categories That Outsell

Top-Converting Item to Boost Your Average Order

4.3 ★★★★★
Based on 1452 reviews
Sort
Highest Rating
Newest First
Oldest First
Product Reviews
L
Verified Purchase
Luna Fae
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 4
Right from the start, I was drawn in by the prologue!!!
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
Queen of Roses (Blood of a Fae #1) by Briar Boleyn Genre General Fiction ( Adult), Romance, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Dark Romance “More primordial than the stars. My name was on his lips as he promised unspeakable darkness to any who came between us.” Right from the start, I was drawn in by the prologue!!! I’m a big fan of “touch her, and you die” vibes, but I mean, what’s also not to love about a unique Arthurian retelling with gender twists, a treacherous royal court, a dangerous quest, magical Fae & mystical monsters, entwined with a bit of spice! Morgan, Princess of Pendrath and true heir to the throne has spent most of her life dimming her light to feel safe and to make others comfortable. She is treated as an outcast in the court and repressed by her family due to the blood of the Fae within her and forced to join the Temple of the Three as a priestess in training to one day replace Merlin. Her brother, King Arthur, who reminds me of Joffrey from Game of Thrones, later tells her that he has other plans and offers her a choice of the Temple or to marry her off for political gain, unless… that is, she can journey through the great unknown and return with a long-lost fae weapon with enchanted powers known as Excalibur. Her quest begins with a roguish crew that includes the mysterious, arrogant, and heart-tuggingly handsome Captain of the Royal Guard, Kairos Draven, whom she can’t decide if she wants to stab or indulge in pleasure with. Along the way are plenty of surprises, mystical creatures, and betrayal, all while Morgan uncovers more of the truth about herself and who she can trust. This book had intriguing storylines and lovable characters that kept me turning pages and wanting more. I can’t wait to see how it all unfolds and comes together in book 2, Court of Claws, which I just started reading!! Read if you’re into- Dark Fantasy/Romance Slow–Burn Question Everything Magic and Action Fae Arthurian Legend Stabby/Broken FFC Morally Gray MMC Forced Proximity Queen of Roses is perfect for Holly Black, Jennifer L. Armentrout, and Sarah J. Maas fans. Please check the trigger warnings page in the table of contents before reading this book.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on August 16, 2023
A
Verified Purchase
Amanda Greathouse
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 3
3.5 stars, A little boring to say the least.
Format: Kindle
Wow so I'm not sure where to begin on this one. This was a very different take on the legend of Arthur and Excalibur. This is told from the point of view of Morgan the sister of Arthur. Honestly the first 50% of this book is world building and character building which unfortunately was super boring for me. Morgan to me was a female MC that had a hard time in believing in herself. Sometimes taking too long to understand exactly what was going on around her. Draven was also a different male MC, like I couldn't put my finger on him and what he was all about. It was not until the last 10% of the book did we get some answers on the mystery that is Draven. The other 50% of the book centered around this big journey with everyone having a different motive. We see a spark of magic around this time that had me excited but then we never expanded upon that and what it could mean for the female MC. I feel like I want to read the second book just to see where this goes, but the spice was probably a 2 out of 5. Side characters are ok, Lancelet was fun but I almost felt like I wanted more.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2023
K
Verified Purchase
Krystina
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
A bewitching retelling of Arthurian legend!
Format: Kindle
In a land where the Fae have nearly become only a legend and those who still posses even a morsel of the blood are few and far between, Morgan finds herself cast aside by most of society due to her rumored half-Fae lineage, including her brother, King Arthur. With the kingdom at the brink of war, Arthur entrusts her with a quest to retrieve a Fae weapon of legendary power: the sword of Perun, Excalibur. Accompanied by men she loathes, Captain Kairos Draven and Ragnar Whitehorn, she embarks on her long and unbeknownst perilous journey, only to find that things she once believed to be myth are in fact very real. With devastating twists, omitted truths, witty banter and fierce action, Queen of Roses leaves you begging to know more about the secrets of Aercanum! Wow, wow, wow! Going into this story, I did not realize that it was going to be a retelling of Arthurian legend, especially not one with a fantastical twist! The unique spin almost gave me The Witcher vibes and I think adding Fae into the mix was quite interesting. I knew the basics of the legend but after reading this book, it has piqued my interest and makes me want to learn more about it. My attention was snatched as soon as I finished the prologue and I knew that I was going to devour this story. I truly enjoyed the gender swaps and even how Arthur was portrayed as villainous. Morgan’s past and even her parts of her present is absolutely heartbreaking, and I felt for her at times. I can only recall one other book that made me hate characters the way I despised Florian and Arthur, leaving me with my blood boiling and feeling disgusted. Even after finishing the book, Draven is still a mystery to me and I cannot figure out how to feel about him. I guess they just means that the author did an excellent job at conveying each character’s persona! The rich world building and imagery made it easy for me to visualize the places that the group visited along their journey. I am truly engulfed in this story and I cannot wait to see wait fate awaits Morgan and how the Fae will be even more incorporated in the next book!. I received a free copy of this book and am voluntarily leaving a review.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on August 11, 2023
T
Verified Purchase
Tiana
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 4
Enchanting
Format: Kindle
"Queen of Roses" by Briar Boleyn is a delightful and refreshing reimagining of the classic tale of King Arthur, with a captivating twist that places the spotlight on Morgan, a character who has often been overshadowed in traditional retellings. Boleyn's creative decision to shift the narrative perspective to Morgan breathes new life into the story, offering readers an intriguing and compelling look at the Arthurian world from an entirely different angle. One of the most commendable aspects of this book is its incorporation of Fae elements, which adds an enchanting layer of magic and mystery to the already familiar Arthurian setting. Boleyn skillfully weaves the world of the Fae into the narrative, creating a captivating backdrop against which the events of the story unfold. This addition not only adds depth to the world-building but also provides ample opportunities for twists and turns that keep readers thoroughly engrossed. However, while the book boasts numerous strengths, it does have one noticeable flaw: the characterization of Morgan. While it is reasonable to create a flawed and complex protagonist, it appears that at times, Morgan's character becomes overly difficult and hard to relate to. Her persistently negative perception of one of the main male characters, who is a potential love interest, despite his efforts to support and assist her, may come across as somewhat irrational and could test the patience of some readers. Striking a balance between a strong, independent character and one who can recognize genuine support and affection could have enhanced the overall reader experience. Nonetheless, the allure of "Queen of Roses" lies in its innovative approach to the Arthurian legend and its skillful blending of fantasy elements into a familiar narrative. Boleyn's evocative prose draws readers into a world where magic, destiny, and fate entwine, leaving us eager to uncover the mysteries that unfold within the pages. I received a free copy of this book via Booksprout and am voluntarily leaving a review.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2023
S
Verified Purchase
Stephanie
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
An action-packed dark romantasy
Format: Kindle
I loved this book! Queen of Roses is an Arthurian-inspired dark romantasy that is the first book in the Blood of Fae series. The story follows Morgan, the princess of Camelot who is rumored to be part fae. Fueled by prejudiced hatred and a mistrust of fae blood, Morgan’s abusive father strips her of her birthright and hands it to her half-brother, Arthur. Instead of becoming queen, Morgan is commanded to join the temple of the goddesses when she comes of age. However, Arthur turns into a psychopathic, power-hungry, fae-hating king as he ages. He develops malevolent plans and commands Morgan to find an ancient weapon with legendary power. Although Morgan is wary of Arthur’s intentions, she embraces the opportunity to go on a journey and potentially change her fate. The story picks up from there and we follow Morgan on her quest to find the ancient relic. It’s full of high stakes adventure, mystery, tension, banter, forced proximity, hidden magic, self discovery, and betrayal. This first installment of the series intricately develops the world building and character development. There’s little romance in this book, but it is evident that it is a slow burn that will continue to develop throughout the remainder of the series. Overall, I loved the world building, the epic fantasy, Morgan’s journey of self discovery, and all of the twists and turns that set the stage for the future installments. I can’t wait to see what happens next!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2024

recommand products